Delgado v. Mitchell

55 S.W.3d 508, 2001 Mo. App. LEXIS 1689, 2001 WL 1134947
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 27, 2001
Docket23908
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 55 S.W.3d 508 (Delgado v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delgado v. Mitchell, 55 S.W.3d 508, 2001 Mo. App. LEXIS 1689, 2001 WL 1134947 (Mo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

SHRUM, Presiding Judge.

Ben Delgado (“Plaintiff’) sued Jerry Mitchell (“Mitchell”) and Camelback Castle Corporation (“Castle Corp.”), alleging they (“Defendants”) owed Plaintiff rent under an oral contract. 1 Specifically, Plaintiff alleged Defendants stored their full-sized antique railroad train on Plaintiffs property for a monthly rental amount that Defendants had not fully paid. Defendants counterclaimed, alleging Plaintiff breached his oral promise to put the train engine on blocks and secure the entire train “from vandals, the elements and other potential hazards.”

After a non-jury trial, the court entered judgment for Plaintiff on his rent claim and for Defendants on their counterclaim against Plaintiff. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment favorable to Defendants on their counterclaim. This court reverses and remands for further proceedings.

*510 During the period relevant to this discussion, Defendants owned a “full-sized, antique train consisting of a steam locomotive and coal car, two yellow passenger cars, one red boxcar, one iron flat car, one yellow utility car with a Hercules diesel engine, and one red caboose car.” 2 There was a period when Defendants operated the train as a tourist attraction on “Old Greta Road” in Branson, Missouri. However, sometime before January 1997, Mitchell sold “the business and ranch” and had to move the train. Accordingly, Mitchell, acting for himself and Castle Corp., contracted with Plaintiff to store the train on a nearby real-estate parcel owned by Plaintiff. As consideration for the storage site, Defendants agreed to pay Plaintiff a monthly rental amount. 3

At trial, Plaintiff insisted that this comprised the entire contract between the parties, i.e., train storage site in exchange for monthly rent. Mitchell testified otherwise, saying he paid Plaintiff $1,500 for which Plaintiff agreed to (1) “jack up” the train engine and put blocks under its four “driver” wheels, and (2) nail “plywood over the windows[,] on the cars and ... caboose.” Mitchell explained he wanted the driver wheels “out of the mud to where they wouldn’t rust” and wanted to “protect the windows[ ]” of the caboose and two passenger cars. Defendants put in evidence the remittor’s copy of a $1,500 money order purchased by Mitchell, payable to Plaintiff, on which appeared this hand-written notation: “Jack up engine and train plus board up windows and door.” This document was dated November 21, 1996. Although Plaintiff denied such agreement existed and denied the $1,500 was given him for those reasons, he did put plywood over the train windows after two young boys broke some windows and put “duffel bags ... [,] candies ... [,] CDs and things like that[ ]” in the caboose. Plaintiff’s employee, Billie Rainbolt, testified the plywood installation “could have been” done in the “[sjummer or fall of ’98.” The train engine was never jacked up and put on blocks.

Mitchell, who lived in Arizona, returned to Branson three times after the train was moved to Plaintiffs property and before this trial was held. During one of those visits, Mitchell saw that the train engine had not been blocked up and that the windows remained uncovered; yet, at that point the train remained in “good condition.” Mitchell’s efforts to talk with Plaintiff during those visits were unsuccessful and there were no further communications between the parties before this suit was filed.

Mitchell testified that, other than the engine was not running, the train was “in good condition” when it was moved to Plaintiffs property. Specifically, he characterized the caboose as the “cream puff of the whole deal[;]” that Defendants had reconditioned everything about the caboose and had also refurbished the two passenger cars. Defendants’ evidence about the train’s current condition at the time of trial and their claim for damages, included the following:

“Q. [to Mitchell] Have you seen the train recently?
“A. I saw it last night.
“Q. ... What condition is it in?
“A. From what I could tell there’s not one window in the whole thing that’s not broke out. I mean, they — they went through and broke every window and *511 the doors with all the — the glass-there was wooden doors, custom-built doors with — the nice windowpanes and everything in them were just trashed....
“Q. What about the caboose?
“A. The — I couldn’t — I couldn’t see in the caboose. I wasn’t able to get in the caboose last night. I just run by there for a minute and it was just about dark.
“Q. What about the engine in the—
“A. The engine and everything is — is just — other than the — the rust where it’s been sitting down there and I don’t know how much damage that’s done. If the — the drivers, you know, I don’t know what damage the rust has done.
“Q. When you say the drivers, you’re talking about the wheels that were—
“A. The wheels.
“Q. — that you want jacked up?
“A. ... You know, it’s setting there in the weather — and that — that’s nobody’s fault on the ... weather. I mean, that’s just part of it. The part that ... I’m upset about is the inside.... If the train would have been boarded up and jacked up when I paid for it to be done there’s a lot of damage that wouldn’t have happened. The kids — There’s a good chance — Kids could have tore the boards off and broke the windows out anyway but I don’t think they would have.”

Mitchell then testified that Plaintiff’s failure to “board up” the cars and his failure to block up the engine “hurt the train $150,000 worth[ ]” and requested judgment for that amount. Mitchell explained his request for a $150,000 judgment as follows: “[T]o put the caboose and the two cars back like they were inside, before the rain and all that and everything got to it, I think you’re talking $50,000 a unit.”

Later, during cross-examination, Mitchell conceded that since he had not looked inside the caboose the previous evening, his opinion about damages to the caboose was “based on what [he] observed ... [o]n the other two cars.” Moreover, when questioned about his inspection of the passenger cars, Mitchell testified he never went inside them; that he could “see through the doors where the boards are not wide enough to cover up all the holes.... ” Continuing, he explained: “Some of the plywood they put on lacked about that much covering ... the gaps and ... it gives you light inside.” Mitchell’s testimony continued as follows:

“Q. So that’s your basis for assessing the damage ... to the passenger cars?
“A. My assessing the damage to the three cars, the — the damage on the three cars, the drivers on the engine that wasn’t jacked up and all of the stuff missing out of the caboose is — is way more than $150,000.
“Q. Okay. That’s not my question. My question is, is your assessment of what damage occurred inside the ... passenger car ...

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W.3d 508, 2001 Mo. App. LEXIS 1689, 2001 WL 1134947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delgado-v-mitchell-moctapp-2001.